Facing a two-goal deficit with 5:23 left in the game, Stars coach Jim Montgomery pulled goaltender Ben Bishop and opted for an extra skater. At the time, there was 1:50 of 4-on-4 upcoming, so the extra skater meant the Stars could treat it like a power play.

Jamie Benn won the offensive zone faceoff but his shot was blocked by Jacob Trouba. The Jets had a chance to score with the empty net but Alexander Radulov made a save on Blake Wheeler.

"Rads is probably our third-string goalie if we needed it," Bishop said. "He's tenacious there. He likes messing around with the goalie gear and he's not afraid to block a shot. If we're going to have someone in that situation, you want Rads because he kind of knows what he's doing out there."

Bishop went back in goal with 4:40 and came out 51 seconds later. Morrissey's empty-netter came from behind his own net.

"It puts urgency in you," Montgomery said of the early pull. "Backfired on us. Didn't work."

Popularity contest: Bishop was booed by Winnipeg fans every time he touched the puck after he drew a second-period goaltender interference penalty on Adam Lowry. Lowry crashed into Bishop behind the net, earning the call.

The crowd also slowly chanted Bishop's name.

"It's nice," Bishop said. "It reminds me of college days when they're all over you. It just makes it that much more fun that you get to play in these buildings that are jamming and chanting your name. I enjoy it because it kind of reminds me of college days."

Post positioning: On TylerMyers' wraparound goal, Bishop used a different post play technique that he often times doesn't need because of his 6-foot-7 size. Bishop used a vertical-horizontal (known as VH) technique to defend Myers as he approached the net, meaning he had his left leg vertical to the post and his right leg down on the ice.

It helps seal the post better than a Reverse VH position would, and takes away higher shots more. With Bishop's height, he can sometimes use Reverse VH and still prevent goals from going top shelf. But VH can be tougher to move laterally than Reverse VH, since you have to drop your pad and then push off.

Here's what they look like, first VH and then Reverse VH.

"He's a right-handed shot, so if I go down, you expose the top shelf," Bishop said. "He's got a long reach, so he went around and five-hole. It's one you probably have to save, but it's a pretty good play."